Jacob Meck Answers Questions about Transfer Station Proposal

During the July 30th Pocahontas County Solid Waste Authority (SWA) meeting, Jacob Meck owner of the Allegheny Disposal Company, made a presentation to the authority members which further clarified his previous offer to build a transfer station for the SWA to operate.

Meck had originally presented to the SWA at their July 16th special meeting, an offer for Allegheny Disposal to build a truck-to-truck transfer station at the county landfill site for the SWA to operate once the landfill is officially filled up and closed in the fall of 2026. That offer included Meck’s company building the transfer station and once it is operational, allowing the SWA operate it and repay his construction costs over time. Meck said his company would also handle the hauling of the trash for the county for a standard fee, but Allegheny Disposal would also be a full tipping fee paying customer of the transfer station once it is operational. Meck has made it clear he is offering this because the SWA has not yet come up with an alternative to the landfill and time is running short to ensure that waste disposal continues in the county once the landfill closes. Prior to making this offer, Meck had planned to build a smaller transfer station on his company property in Green Bank for the use of his own company, but his new proposal would make that unnecessary and would also benefit the citizens of Pocahontas County.

Some of the answers he provided at the July 30th SWA meeting included:

  • He can dispose of one load per month of leachate by hauling it to a proper disposal site at a nominal cost of $1,129.00 per load. (Leachate is the solution (or suspension) that forms when liquid travels through a solid and absorbs some components of that solid with it.) He said a truck-to-truck transfer station generates very little leachate.
  • Instead of costly asphalt, he would use a concrete apron at the transfer station, and a gravel roadway from the scales to the station.
  • The existing water well will be in the way of the big trucks, but it can be cut below grade with a manhole cover to overcome that.
  • There will be minimal trash spilling out onto the transfer station floor in this type of transfer station, and the three-sided building will face East to minimize any wind-blown trash.
  • The inclusion of three walking floor trailers will be enough to eliminate having any trash laying around outside of trailers over weekends when the Greenbrier and Tucker landfills are closed
  • If the trash crane breaks down, it will be Allegheny Disposal’s responsibility to provide a back-up piece of equipment.
  • The transfer station will be able to handle Construction Debris.
  • The SWA will continue to maintain and snow plow the landfill road, as they do now, and will also be responsible for ensuring only legitimate trash is disposed of at the green boxes, and also to continue doing the other functions that they currently do.
  • The transfer station construction lease will run $300,000 to $330,000 annually and hauling the annual 7,000 tons of trash to the Tucker County Landfill will cost $525,000 per year (which is $75.00 per ton and includes the fuel surcharge.)
  • He estimates the total annual cost budget for the SWA will be between $1,180,600 and $1,228,100.

Meck said he recognizes that this is much more expensive then it was to use their own landfill, but that will no longer be an option after the fall of 2026, and this is probably the least expensive alternative. He also said he has some ideas to help the SWA to generate more revenue which he will discuss later with the SWA.

Also at the meeting, the SWA members voted to recommend to the WV Department of Environmental Protection that they appoint Gregory Hammonds to the Pocahontas County SWA Board to replace Jamie Walker, whose term expired and who did not request to be reappointed.

Story By

Tim Walker

Tim is the WVMR News Reporter. Tim is a native of Maryland who started coming to Pocahontas County in the 1970’s as a caver. He bought land on Droop Mountain off Jacox Road in 1976 and built a small house there in the early 80’s. While still working in Maryland, Tim spent much time at his place which is located on the Friars Hole Cave Preserve. Retiring in 2011 as a Lieutenant with the Anne Arundel County Police Department in Maryland, Tim finally took the plunge and moved from Maryland to his real home on Droop Mountain. He began working as the Pocahontas County Reporter for Allegheny Mountain Radio in January of 2015.

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